The phrase
"antidiuretic hormone" refers to a hormone that helps your body control the amount of water released through urine. It reduces the amount of urine produced by the kidneys and helps keep more water in your body.
Full definition
High blood calcium levels have been reported to cause increased urination, perhaps through its ability to interfere with the action
of antidiuretic hormone (ADH, AVP, vasopressin) released by your pet's pituitary gland.
Arginine vasopressin (AVP), also known as argipressin or
antidiuretic hormone (ADH), is a human hormone that is mainly released when the body is low on water; it causes the kidneys to conserve water by concentrating the urine.
Alcohol inhibits
an antidiuretic hormone that would normally send some of the fluid you're consuming back into the body, and instead sends it to your bladder.
It can act as
an antidiuretic hormone.
In particular, what's referred to as the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
the antidiuretic hormone — SIADH — has been implicated as the main cause of EAH.
Restaurant meals tend to be high in sodium, which throws off
antidiuretic hormones — chemicals that control how much you urinate — and can leave you feeling dehydrated and bloated.
Diabetes insipidus is caused by a lack of vasopressin,
the antidiuretic hormone that controls water resorption by the kidneys.